J.P. Sniadecki

  • Verena Paravel & J.P. Sniadecki – Foreign Parts (2010)

    Verena Paravel2001-2010DocumentaryJ.P. SniadeckiUSA
    Foreign Parts (2010)
    Foreign Parts (2010)

    Synopsis:
    A hidden enclave in the shadow of the New York Mets’ new stadium, the neighborhood of Willets Point is an industrial zone fated for demolition. Filled with scrapyards and auto salvage shops, lacking sidewalks or sewage lines, the area seems ripe for urban development. But Foreign Parts discovers a strange community where wrecks, refuse and recycling form a thriving commerce. Cars are stripped, sorted and cataloged by brand and part, then resold to an endless parade of drive-thru customers. Joe, the last original resident, rages and rallies through the street like a lost King Lear, trying to contest his imminent eviction. Two lovers, Sara and Luis, struggle for food and safety through the winter while living in an abandoned van. Julia, the homeless queen of the junkyard, exalts in her beatific visions of daily life among the forgotten. The film observes and captures the struggle of a contested “eminent domain” neighborhood before its disappearance under the capitalization of New York’s urban ecology.Read More »

  • Lisa Malloy & J.P. Sniadecki – A Shape of Things to Come (2020)

    USA2011-2020AdventureDocumentaryJ.P. SniadeckiLisa Malloy

    A sensory and cinematic work from the Sonoran Desert in the southern US, where a man lives in a lonely pact with a brutal nature and in the shadow of the apocalypse.Read More »

  • Libbie Dina Cohn & J.P. Sniadecki – People’s Park (2012)

    2011-2020DocumentaryEthnographic CinemaExperimentalJ.P. SniadeckiLibbie Dina CohnUSA

    A mesmerizing, one-of-a-kind window into modern China, People’s Park is a single-shot documentary that immerses viewers in an unbroken journey through a famous urban park in Chengdu, Sichuan Province.Read More »

  • Joshua Bonnetta & J.P. Sniadecki – El mar la mar (2017)

    2011-2020DocumentaryExperimentalJ.P. SniadeckiJoshua BonnettaUSA

    Official website says:
    An immersive and enthralling journey through the Sonoran Desert on the U.S.-Mexico border, El mar la mar weaves together harrowing oral histories from the area with hand-processed 16mm images of flora, fauna and items left behind by travelers. Subjects speak of intense, mythic experiences in the desert: A man tells of a fifteen-foot-tall monster said to haunt the region, while a border patrolman spins a similarly bizarre tale of man versus beast. A sonically rich soundtrack adds to the eerie atmosphere as the call of birds and other nocturnal noises invisibly populate the austere landscape.
    Emerging from the ethos of Harvard’s Sensory Ethnography Lab, J.P. Sniadecki’s attentive documentary approach mixes perfectly with Joshua Bonnetta’s meditations on the materiality of film. Together, they’ve created an experience of the border region like nothing you’ve seen, heard or felt before.Read More »

  • J.P. Sniadecki – The Iron Ministry (2014)

    2011-2020DocumentaryJ.P. SniadeckiUSA

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    Filmed over three years on China’s railways, THE IRON MINISTRY traces the vast interiors of a country on the move: flesh and metal, clangs and squeals, light and dark, and language and gesture. Scores of rail journeys come together into one, capturing the thrills and anxieties of social and technological transformation. THE IRON MINISTRY immerses audiences in fleeting relationships and uneasy encounters between humans and machines on what will soon be the world’s largest railway network.Read More »

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